The region primarily corresponds to the former
Kherson,
Taurida, and most of the
Yekaterinoslav Governorates which spanned across the northern coast of
Black Sea after the Russian-Ottoman Wars of
1768–74 and
1787–92. The
Kurgan hypothesis places the
Pontic steppes of Ukraine and southern Russia as the
linguistic homeland of the
Proto-Indo-Europeans. The
Yamnaya culture is identified with the late Proto-Indo-Europeans. The region has been inhabited for centuries by various nomadic tribes, such as
Scythians,
Sarmatians,
Alans,
Huns,
Bulgars,
Pechenegs,
Kipchaks,
Turco-Mongols and
Tatars. in about 1600. Note that the areas marked
Poland and
Muscovy were claimed rather than administered. Before the 18th century, the territory known as the
Wild Fields (as translated from Polish or Ukrainian) was dominated by Ukrainian Cossack community better known as
Zaporozhian Sich and the realm of
Crimean Khanate with its
Nogai minions that was a union state of the bigger
Ottoman Empire. The
Crimean–Nogai slave raids caused considerable devastation and depopulation in the area before the rise of the
Zaporozhian Cossacks. Encroachment of Muscovy (today Russia) in the region started after the 16th century after its expansion along
Volga river after the
Moscow-Kazan wars and conquest of
Astrakhan. Further expansion continued also with
Moscow-Lithuania armed clashes. With start of the
Khmelnytsky Uprising within
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in middle of 17th century, Muscovy on pretence of the eastern Orthodoxy protection further expanded its influence down south over Cossack communities of Pontic steppes (lower Don and lower Dnieper) and the Crimean Khan domains. At the end of 17th century a native Kyivan, bishop
Theophan Prokopovych came up with the idea of an
all-Russian nation referring to the old Rus state founder of which
Volodymyr the Great was baptized and accepted Byzantine Christianity (today known as
Eastern Orthodoxy) in
Chersoneses of Taurida (today in
Sevastopol). In 1686 there was signed the
Treaty of Perpetual Peace between Muscovy and Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, after which Muscovy took control over the
Left-bank Ukraine,
Zaporozhian Sich, and
Kyiv with outskirts. In the 18th century,
Ukrainian line was built and the lands of the earlier destroyed
Zaporozhian Sich were resettled by Serbs creating the territories of
New Serbia and
Slovianoserbia. At the end of 18th century following the
annexation of Crimea by the Russian Empire and the
treaty of Jassy (the
Ochakiv Region, area of today's Odesa and Mykolaiv oblasts), the
Russian Empire assumed full control of the northern
Black Sea coast. by region (
Census 2001) as mother tongue by region (Census 2001)
Russian Hellenization of Pontic littoral After the Russian-Ottoman Wars of the second half of 18th century (
1768–74 and
1787–92) and acquisition of all territory of modern southern Ukraine, number of settlements and cities with Turkic or other names in region were renamed in Greek or Russian manner. • Acidere →
Ovidiopol • Hacıbey →
Odesa • Orel Sloboda (Catherinine sconce) → Olviopol (today
Pervomaisk, Mykolaiv Oblast) • Domakha →
Mariupol (by Balaklava Greeks from outskirts of
Bakhchysarai) • Bilehowisce (Alexander sconce) →
Kherson • Aqyar → Sebastopol (today
Sevastopol) • Kezlev →
Yevpatoria • Kiz-yar → Novo-alexandrovka (Novo-olexandrivka) Sloboda → Melitopol • Caffa (Kefe) → Theodosia (today
Feodosia) • Aqmescit →
Simferopol • Mykytyn Rih → Slaviansk →
Nikopol • Usivka (Bečej sconce) → Alexandria (today
Oleksandriia) • Sucleia (Sredinnaya fortress) →
Tiraspol (in Moldova) • Czorna →
Grigoriopol (in Moldova) Following the
World War II any trace of Crimean Tatar toponymy was predominantly removed in Crimea and Kherson Oblast. ==Politics==